Covered Leaves and Durations
Leave Type | Covered Leave | Maximum Leave in a 12-month Period |
---|---|---|
Disability |
| 52 weeks |
Family Leave |
| 8 weeks |
Weekly Benefit Amount
Benefit Calculation:
- 70% of wages for individuals who earn less than one-third of the state’s average quarterly wage, or
- 60% of wages for individuals who earn one-third or more of the state’s average quarterly wage
Maximum Weekly Benefit: $1,620
Minimum Weekly Benefit: $50
State Average Weekly Wage: $1,642
Waiting Period
There is no waiting period for Paid Family Leave. Benefits are payable as of the first day of covered leave.
There is a seven-day waiting period for SDI.
Intermittent Leaves
Employees can take their leave on an intermittent basis or all at once.
Covered Employees
Employees are eligible for paid family leave benefits if they have:
- Contributed to the California SDI program through payroll deductions during their base period
- Earned at least $300 in the base period
The base period covers the 12 months — divided into four consecutive quarters — before the PFL claim's start date. The base period includes wages subject to SDI tax that were paid about 5 to 18 months before the claim began.
Family Members
Covered employees may take family leave to care for a:
- Spouse or domestic partner
- Child
- Parent
- Parent-in-law
- Sibling
- Grandchild
- Grandparent
Plan Options
California provides State Disability Insurance and PFL to eligible employees with qualifying reasons. Employers in the state may offer SDI and PFL as Voluntary Disability Insurance.
SDI:
Employees may be able to use SDI for:
- A non work-related injury or illness that keeps them from working
- A pregnancy and/or childbirth
PFL:
Eligible employees can also receive PFL to:
- Care for a seriously ill family member
- Bond with a new child
- Address a qualifying military need
California's PFL program can run concurrently with:
- California's Pregnancy Disability Leave
- California's Family Rights Act (when leave is not due to pregnancy)
- The federal Family and Medical Leave Act
Funding
Employee contributions — through payroll deductions — fund California's paid family leave program and its SDI program. The contribution rate is set at 1.1% with no taxable wage limit.
Employers can choose to pay for their employees' contributions. Or they may offer Voluntary Disability Insurance as an employee-paid benefit.
Additional Information Employers Need to Know
Employers must post the following statements in clearly visible places at the workplace:
- Notice to Employees: Unemployment Insurance/Disability Insurance/Paid Family Leave
- Disability Insurance Provisions
- Paid Family Leave Benefits
New hires and employees taking covered leave should also receive brochures about SDI and PFL.
More Information
Visit the California Paid Family Leave site for more information on California’s PFL.
If you'd like to see how we can help you comply with leave laws, check out our leave management services. We offer both absence management and benefits administration so you can focus your time where you need it most.
Effective 1/1/24, CA Senate Bill 951 will remove the wage cap on income subject to CA’s SDI tax. This will increase taxes for higher wage earners and increase benefits for low wage earners. View more details on contribution rates and benefit amounts.
All information on this page is subject to change as state requirements change.
Calculate PFML Benefits
Use this calculator with your employees to help them get a quick estimate of their PFML benefit amounts.